It's the morning after the night before, and Sony Worldwide Studios president Shuhei Yoshida has just confirmed to us that current-generation PSN titles won't transfer across to the PlayStation 4. The company admitted last night that PS3 games wouldn't be compatible with the latest console, but has added that it will try to make titles playable "in some form." Because the architecture of the Power-PC-based PS3 and x86-based PlayStation 4 are so different, Sony will only bring across games that don't guzzle the latest console's power in emulation. The executive also said that the company aims to offer server-side and cloud services to offer a wider library of older games, but said that's one for the "longer term."

It's not like PSN games use the CELL and RSX to their full potential, PS3 has a PS2 emulator where do you think all these PS2 classics are coming from, they are essentially just ISO files wrapped in a PS2 emulator.

It's not like PSN games use the CELL and RSX to their full potential, PS3 has a PS2 emulator where do you think all these PS2 classics are coming from, they are essentially just ISO files wrapped in a PS2 emulator.

That's a ridiculous statement. There are only about 50 PS2 games on the PSN store and PS2 is not the same as PS3. PS3 is 10x more powerful and it's not like there are any PC emulators that can handle it, unlike with PS2.